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Modern Blu-ray drives can now rip GameCube, Wii, and Xbox 360 games to PC

Twenty years ago, I bought two Wii consoles for my family when they first came out. Being concerned about the rough treatment my family gave the discs, I eventually modded both of the Wiis so they could read normal discs, and I purchased a HP 410125-200 drive, which I used to back up the more costly titles.

https://forums.dolphin-emu.org/Thread-those-recommended-dvd-...

18 hours agoanonymousiam

The question is how much longer will you even be able to find Blu Ray drives at all. The UHD drive market is already dangerously small and it was a PITA to get a replacement when my previous one died to a kamikaze disc.

6 hours agoaccount42

I recently noticed mine is struggling to recognize disks sometimes and I was shocked when I started looking in to a replacement.

2 hours agommmlinux

Would be very curious to hear more about these kamikaze discs.

4 hours agonoman-land

Just a regular possibly damaged UHD disk that violently disintegrated from centrifugal forces after too many read attempts, taking the drive with it to the grave. It's possible that the disc is innocent here and the drive was simply spinning it beyond design speeds but either way both are dead now.

2 hours agoaccount42

I'm assuming this firmware also functions as a LibreDrive firmware for use with MakeMKV?

21 hours agopiperswe

My understanding is that LibreDrive leverages a bug in the drives firmware such that decryption keys for Blu-ray was accessible. This OmniDrive seems to have little to do with decryption.

20 hours agocosmotic

LibreDrive only works on certain firmwares that have the bug or are patched to expose it.

OmniDrive is one of the latter.

20 hours agorainernotfound

Ripping those tiny GameCube discs is interesting!

13 hours agomusicale

Who uses a green X for not supported.

edit: (on the github readme)

20 hours agommmlinux

red-green colorblind folks?

18 hours agokrackers
[deleted]
20 hours ago

Yes, we absolutely don’t support this one, we should make it super duper clear how certain we are that we know we don’t support this one.

Maybe a X shape?

19 hours agobozhark

maybe an :-( emoticon ?

19 hours agorolph

Stop sign?

13 hours agoreactordev

tl;dr

https://github.com/RibShark/OmniDrive

21 hours agonom

It is unclear to me why OP linked to an article that linked to a video that talks about the repo (I guess? Didn't click) instead of just.. you know.. LINKING THE REPO.

Thank you.

20 hours agohypfer

[flagged]

18 hours agocharcircuit

This firmware is code, and code is speech[0]. Any law making speech illegal is unconstitutional. I'm puzzled as to why the DMCA (or this part of it) hasn't been overturned yet.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junger_v._Daley

18 hours agotheandrewbailey

It hasn't been overturned for the same reason copyright hasn't been despite it restricting people's speech.

17 hours agocharcircuit

In other words, this is a law that still ought to be overturned by a better Supreme Court.

14 hours agobit-anarchist

We all do illegal things all the time, I’m fine knowing that this one goes in the “bad” pile. I’m sure something terrible will happen to me soon.

18 hours agopirates

It's not just you who you are affecting, but also all the people who worked on the game, Nintendo and Microsoft, and even the entire video game industry by doing things like this.

18 hours agocharcircuit

Continuing to play discontinued games and sharing that joy with new people and generations seems like a good way of strengthening an industry

18 hours agowhycome

Well, yes I guess, but will it create short-term value for shareholders? Mountains of it if possible?

17 hours agoASalazarMX

And there are legal ways to do so like buying the discontinued game physically.

13 hours agocharcircuit

"legal" ways don't align - there's not enough profit in it.

an hour agowhycome

Yeah, Nintendo AND Microsoft of all companies really do deserve all the pity they can get, seeing as they’re such pro-consumer, fan-friendly, not-at-all monopolistic, completely altruistic entities. Right?

17 hours agoisidisjcisjcud

Nintendo and Microsoft have enabled a ton of value to be created in the video game market and they should be highly respected.

13 hours agocharcircuit

For that they are. But for everything else they’ve pulled (and continue to pull to this day) they deserve scorn, ridicule and, perhaps most importantly, financial troubles.

Microsoft likes to dig its own graves and bury its own products through series of baffling anti-consumer decisions, and given the state of Xbox currently, there’s not much left of it to bury anyways.

But Nintendo? They deserve every single attack aimed at them. Go look up some of the tactics they continue to employ (some dating back to the 80s, mind you) to stop game preservation, meddle with fan games, and just all around do everything they can to ensure the only way to play a Nintendo game is by paying full price for it (regardless of the game’s age and quality of emulation).

Nintendo and Microsoft do not deserve pity.

4 hours agoisidisjcisjcud

You don't have to try so hard to convince me, I was already on board with the patched firmware.

6 hours agoaccount42

We already had copyright law for that. We didn't need to make some code illegal, too.

18 hours agotheandrewbailey

The world already tried that. In response to continuing violations things were made more restrictive.

13 hours agocharcircuit

Ok then lets get rid of copyright as well since corporations are clearly not sticking to the deal.

6 hours agoaccount42

Won't someone think of the multi billion dollar corporations?!

If peop- THIEEEVES can just download old games forever, how will these companies make money by selling new games? Or reselling the old games in their half-baked emulation offerings!

Truly the author behind this software deserves a special place in hell for creating such an evil!

(Obligatory reminder the above is to be taken as hyperbolic sarcasm. The very idea that someone would jump to defend corporations against software designed for cultural preservation is saddening)

16 hours agoCursedSilicon

> Or reselling the old games in their half-baked emulation offerings!

You mean other people's emulators that they have badly packaged together with the game. Emulators from precisely the groups that also develop these kind of compatibility patches to get to the data.

6 hours agoaccount42

[dead]

16 hours agocindyllm

Oh no!

18 hours agofortyseven

The legality is subject to the court’s opinion, and a court is not compelled to interpret the situation the same way you do. Their job is to interpret written laws using their opinions and available case law, and also to pass human judgments on laws that aren’t encoded in machine-parseable structures (such as fair use rights). Declaring this particular instance illegal this early requires more case law references than you’ve provided.

17 hours agoaltairprime

Is it actually breaking DRM? Or is it just creating a 1:1 copy of a proprietary format?

> Game consoles that are supported include the original Xbox, Xbox 360, GameCube, Wii, and Dreamcast. Physical media from other consoles, such as PlayStation 3, 4, 5, and the Xbox One/Series consoles, technically work, but the content on physical media for these consoles is encrypted.

Breaking encryption is definitely “illegal” - but backing up a binary format is not. I can backup my GBA cartridges ROMs for personal archival use if I have a device that can read them.

18 hours agotacticalturtle

I would consider changing the format of a disc to prevent it from being copied by a regular drive to be considered a protection measure. The content is still encrypted so if not the disc, it would be the emulator decrypting it which would be the problem.

18 hours agocharcircuit

[dead]

10 hours agojuanani
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